“For God and Country”: Religion and the Endorsement of National Self-Stereotypes

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Issue Date
2000-07Author
Burris, Christopher T.
Branscombe, Nyla R.
Jackson, Lynne M.
Publisher
SAGE Publications (UK and US)
Format
263900 bytes
Type
Article
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Show full item recordAbstract
To assess the relationship between personal religious motivation and spontaneous thoughts about one's nation, Canadian and American undergraduates completed a measure of religious orientation, and both listed and rated the importance of self-generated thoughts about their respective countries. Among Americans, intrinsic orientation predicted greater ascribed importance to the national heritage (e.g., freedom, equal opportunity, tradition, and family) and to official national symbols such as the flag. Among Canadians, intrinsic orientation predicted greater ascribed importance to multiculturalism but was unrelated to the enshrining of national symbols. Thus, in both cases, intrinsic religion was associated with the endorsement of ideological components of the nation's dominant self-stereotype.
Description
Portions of this paper were presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, Montreal, Canada, November 1998.
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Citation
Burris, CT; Branscombe, NR; Jackson, LM. “For God and Country”: Religion and the Endorsement of National Self-Stereotypes. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 31(4): 517-527.
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